Neutrogena — Continue Reading BelowIf replica designer bags , like me, you’re so loyal to abrasive, scrubby cleansers that you’ve had to Google «how much exfoliation is too much exfoliation,» a new report in The New York Times might get you down. Lobbyists, it says mihalis.de , are now seeking a ban on those teeny little microbeads that give so many of our favorite products their grit, and they’re making New York state (where both me and my Neutrogena Deep Clean live) their first battleground.That’s a bummer, but even more depressing is the reasoning why: Apparently, those tiny plastic beads slip through the processing at water treatment plants, only to get end up in oceans and lakes, where they’re poisoning fish and polluting waters. Yikes. That’s truly depressing.On the bright side, both Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble—two of the biggest beauty brand conglomerates—are working on phasing out the microbeads, says the Times. But it’s sort of weird to think the problem’s been a problem for this long, isn’t it? I had no idea. (And even weirder that in all my Googling of exfoliation-related concerns, it never once came up!) Related: How to Wash Your FaceRelated: ELLE Editors’ Favorite Facial Cleansers